If you just want to tinker with asterisk, very little is actually required. I had it running on a celeron 300A with 256 MB of ram on a system that was doing a number of other things all the time. This was not high call volume in the slightest, but if you just want to try it out, it doesn't take much. Especially if you avoid transcoding of audio formats. I've since upgraded the whole system to a P3 800 MHz, and it's running fine full time. The only money I've put into this PBX system is an $11 modem to hook it to my phone line, and later $50 for a hard phone. The rest is free software. I'm still hoping to get some sort of FXS interface so I can hook up my analog phones, but that seems to be the most expensive part of the system.

Regarding [EMAIL PROTECTED], I hadn't been aware of its existence until know, but it looks like it might make a basic setup pretty easy. That might appeal to some, but for the most part, especially most of those on this list, I think you'd be better off taking a little time to learn the asterisk configuration files. It's a little tricky at first, but the sample configs are quite good and well commented. But then again, I'm the sort of guy who likes to really understand what's going on. Others may like a more automatic approach.

Joel

Greg Brown wrote:

Maybe would should have an Asterisk table at our next install-fest?

Jon


Yes, please.  When?  Where?  I'll be there.

I'd like to tinker with Asterisk, that is for sure.

Okay, okay.

P-IV?  Is that enough?  Or Dual Xeon?
SCSI subsystem...
how much RAM?  2 gig?  4 gig?  What kind?
10k RPM disks, or greater?
technology is starting to sound expensive. :)

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